Whetele, whose origins and early career are obscure, was admitted to the freedom of Wells in July 1428, his entry fine being waived as he had married the twice-widowed former wife of the recently deceased master, Simon Bailly.
Little else is known of Whetele. In the autumn of 1428 he was in dispute with his neighbour Henry Selwood* over a debt, and in late 1435 he accused the tanner William Tylly of an unspecified deception. He is not recorded at Wells thereafter, and may either have died or have left the city.
